- Property type: Apartment / flathouse
- Offer type: For Rent
- City: Phnom Penh
- Neighborhood: Daun Penh , Phsar Kandal , Royal Palace
- Original Property ID: DP2.G1
- Bedrooms: 2
- Bathrooms: 2
- Property size: 120 m²
Features
- Air Conditioning
- Ceiling fans
- City views
- EDC and Water State rates
- Fully furnished
- High ceilings
- Hot water
- Large open plan spaces
- Natural light
- Near schools
- Parking nearby
- Washing machine
- WiFi
Details
Here is a rare opportunity for you to rent a large 2-bedroom architect-designed apartment close to the Royal Palace and Riverside action in Daun Penh.
Throughout are simple, effective design solutions to make your life easier.
Storage solutions, colour schemes, easy-to-clean tiles, dimmer lighting, secure access and more.
Apartment features:
- Safe and stairwell direct to street level
- Parking nearby
- Natural light and ventilation from all sides
- Large floor plan with lots of entertaining space
- Large air-conditioned bedrooms
- Efficient kitchen – refrigerator, gas stove, electric oven
- Ceiling fans in all spaces
- Fully and tastefully furnished
Original ID: DP2.G1
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Daun Penh: the real downtown
Day and night Riverside, Daun Penh, is busy.
It is probably the real downtown Phnom Penh where the oldest parts of the city are located.
I am referring to Wat Phnom, Phsar Chas, Phsar Kandal, Chey Chumneas and Chaktomuk and the Royal Palace and National Museum of course!
Preah Sisowath (honoring King Sisowath 1904 to 1927 reign) is the avenue / boulevard running along the riverfront. It starts at the Buddhist Institute near Sothearos Boulevard.
Then continues north to the Japanese Bridge where it becomes National Road 6 leading north to Battambang.
Generations of days gone by have left their footprints from Angkor kings to French colonists to UN troops.
Riverside witnesses the confluence of the Mekong, Tonle Sap and Bassac rivers and where the Water Festival is best viewed each November. It is always stunning, especially at sunup and sundown.
In Riverside, there is a wide selection of restaurants, wellbeing services, hotels, shops and bars aimed at tourists.
Among the restaurants, you will find good selections – German, Italian, French, Chinese, Korean, Japanese, Vietnamese, Thai, Indonesian and Malaysian.
Daun Penh
Street 172 is punctuated with $3 massage joints and bars occupied by grey faces framed with light grey hair.
Yet, just around the corner, Street 178 is now arguably the rising art gallery district of Phnom Penh with the University of Fine Arts a stone’s throw away.
This is the dichotomy of Riverside and the attraction of opposites that makes it such an interesting place!
Friends Café has made a bold statement and the Mansion House seems to be waiting for reincarnation.
Now the Hyatt has opened its doors to the Jet set, it may well be a different designer-schmick precinct to what is currently now.
In fact, when you look up along 172, the standard of shophouses is somewhat ‘better’ than in other parts of the city: it could be the rising star of Daun Penh and Riverside.
In the streets around Riverside, there is a sense that there are too many hostess bars, each vying for a shifting slice of the tourist and expat pie.
Rents will rise with the inevitable escalation of land values and the ROI of each vendor’s patch will become more and more critical as the clock ticks.
Looking at Phsar Kandal and the open block where Prey Sar prison once sat, one can’t help but wonder what’s coming next.
Given its proximity to the riverfront and the 172 and 178 ‘sweet spot’, maybe there is something special waiting in the sidelines, something for the inspired new generation of architects and artists.
The magnificent Silver Pagoda | Royal Palace (1892 – 1902)
The southern area of the Royal Palace complex is where you’ll find Wat Preah Keo Morakot (Silver Pagoda).
The pagoda’s previous name was Wat Uborsoth Rotannaram due to the fact that the King performed his religious rituals there every Buddhist Silas Day.
The Majestic King Norodom Sihanouk, only stayed there for a year until he embraced the monastic life on July 31, 1947.
The royal family and government representatives hold Buddhist rites there. READ ON
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